Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 SUMMER can be hell if you are among the hordes who endure nettle rash , bad reactions to insect bites and stings , sensitivity to sunlight , or any of the allergies which are so common from now right on through the summer .
2 Robert Montague ( right ) hit a winning streak in the 1980s — and it 's carrying right on into the 1990s .
3 ‘ Here we are , ’ announced the Brigadier , emerging suddenly from his world of private woes and turning right on to a grassy track running between two olive groves .
4 Sunderland will have to wait a little longer before knowing whether to turn left or right on to the M25 .
5 Leaving the rotunda , turn right on to the embankment , Smetanovo nábřeží where there is a fine memorial to Francis II , Emperor of Austria , by J. Kranner , built 1844–6 .
6 They mounted the slight slope and , turning right on to the Westport road , walked towards the village .
7 I 've got to go right on to the end of whatever all this is , because I ca n't go back .
8 There is no way out of the Upper Kirk other than scrambling to the left or right on to the higher ground .
9 He took the wheel after that and drove at a furious speed back to San José , where he turned right on to the Pan-Am .
10 You see well the point was when you pick 'em up erm we had a sm we had a big boat , what we called hanger boat , a very heavy boat and that used to have a wooden so therefore we used to pull it up by hand and pull it ove on a little barrel with a hand power that 's what we used to do and once we got the anchor in board we 'd pull the chain in by hand and then rerun it again right on to the mud and on the anchor again .
11 I shop there a lot as it 's so handy for my offices , and I seem to recall that about six months ago the floristry section was moved from an upper floor where no one ever saw it right on to the Oxford Street frontage . ’
12 The grenade dropped right on to the cab floor in front of Rex .
13 They did n't come right on to the when I was
14 Well it 's not because as I say , they actually park right on to the roundabout .
15 so anyway he went right on until the Saturday and he said look , on the Friday they called us in and they said look we 're gon na take him to the ward I 'm afraid there 's nothing else we can do , just deteriorating and he said there 's no
16 Once upon a time ( I said , and he stared bitterly bitterly at the floor ) there was a very ugly monster who captured a princess and put her in a dungeon in his castle .
17 ‘ The new organisation is aligned with the change process which is currently ongoing and will enable shift teams to work more effectively right across the terminal , ’ commented Roy Beardall .
18 His round , brown eyes regarded me obliquely , a little suspiciously above the high cheekbones .
19 Moral indignation sits rather uneasily on the hon. Gentleman 's shoulders , particularly on this matter .
20 The birth rate also continued to decline , though most slowly among the poorest .
21 Forest Mere , which is owned and run most luxuriously by the Savoy Group , really is the most wonderful place in the world to revive one after a tiring period , and remove any aches and pains .
22 Those who commit these crimes must be pursued most vigorously under the criminal law ; if they are allowed to get away with it others will take encouragement to follow their example .
23 This union and other unions have protested most vigorously to the Mersey Region and they decided then to go ahead with the appeals by approaching other trade unions , not necessarily involved in clinical skills , like the plumbers and the joiners of the A U E W and the EPTU .
24 These groups are the boys ' gangs that flourish most conspicuously in the ‘ delinquent neighbourhoods ’ of our large American cities .
25 At the same time , one must remember that there were other aspects of the economy which were virtually unaffected by war ; one sees this in the growth of the mining interest in the North-east , and most conspicuously in the continuation of trading connections with areas even after the political ties which had created them had been broken .
26 Meaning is not an issue that arises for the Russian Formalists , and it is here that they differ most fundamentally from the American New Critics with whom they otherwise have so many similarities .
27 And , most importantly for the lads , judging by the roar which greeted its first appearance , he can still windmill his right arm .
28 I really want to go out and kick some ass one last time for Jeffrey , for me , for us , and most importantly for the people who come to see us . ’
29 Four ‘ change-facilitating factors ’ are picked out by Ramon ; heavy and unchanging reliance on segregated institutions ; the existence of a minority of psychiatrists prepared to act politically ( while not having the desire to act in a party political framework ) ; the autonomous nature of the regions leading to more enthusiastic reform beginning in socialist and communist areas ; and perhaps most importantly for the concerns of this book ,
30 Footballers are seen simultaneously as representatives of a club and its traditions , of a community and its collective sensibility and most importantly of a sport beloved by young and impressionable people .
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